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Center for Advanced Holocaust Studies Guide to English-Language ...

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Legislative Archives, Washing<strong>to</strong>n, D.C.<br />

Finding aid: Preliminary folder-level description<br />

USHMM, <strong>Center</strong> <strong>for</strong> <strong>Advanced</strong> <strong>Holocaust</strong> <strong>Studies</strong> � 100<br />

RG-06.005.07M --- U.S. Army Case Files—Auschwitz Concentration Camp<br />

These case files relate <strong>to</strong> an investigation concerning the Auschwitz camp; they include<br />

witness and survivor testimony, records of interrogation of alleged war criminals, and<br />

lists of alleged war criminals. Subjects include crimes committed by camp personnel,<br />

medical experiments (e.g., by Josef Menegele, Friedrich Entress), collaboration (Konrad<br />

Reinhard alleged Gypsy collabora<strong>to</strong>r), and the like.<br />

Provenance: National Archives and Records Administration, RG 338<br />

<strong>Language</strong>s: German, <strong>English</strong> 1943–1947<br />

1 microfilm roll (16 mm)<br />

Source of Acquisition: National Archives and Records Administration, College Park,<br />

MD.<br />

Finding aid: Folder-level description<br />

Accession 1992.45 --- The Manfred Lovin Collection<br />

This collection includes pho<strong>to</strong>graphs, postcards, correspondence, official papers, and<br />

artifacts relating <strong>to</strong> Manfred Lovin (born Manfred Loewin); his life in Germany; his<br />

family in Germany and their deportation, incarceration, and murder; his arrest and jailing<br />

<strong>for</strong> ―racial pollution‖; his divorce from his first wife; and his emigration <strong>to</strong> and<br />

subsequent life in the United States.<br />

<strong>Language</strong>s: German, <strong>English</strong> 1893–1979<br />

Source of Acquisition: Rabbi and Mrs. Eugene Lipman<br />

NOTE: See also RG-19.040—The Lawrence and Irene Koenigsberger Collection, and<br />

RG-28.007—Manfred Lovin United Restitution Organization Case File.<br />

RG-02.153 --- Joe Gelber Collection<br />

This collection contains descriptions of the German occupation of Poland, conditions in<br />

the Częs<strong>to</strong>chowa ghet<strong>to</strong>, Joe Gelber‘s separation from his wife and other family<br />

members, the HASAG <strong>for</strong>ced labor camp at Częs<strong>to</strong>chowa, conditions in Buchenwald and<br />

Nordhausen (a.k.a. Dora-Mittelbau), Gelber‘s liberation by Seymour Zipper, his reunion<br />

with his wife and other surviving family members, their experiences at the Feldafing<br />

displaced persons camp, and Gelber‘s emigration <strong>to</strong> the United States. Also included are<br />

an original letter and copy of a pho<strong>to</strong>graph, both by Seymour Zipper, relating <strong>to</strong> Joe<br />

Gelber‘s condition when he was found at Nordhausen.

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